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Postmortem: Texas staggers off the mat

January 12th, 2012 by

A season in review.

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Be careful what you ask for. The general consensus on the starting quarterback in August was “Anyone but Garrett Gilbert,” and the wish came true: Gilbert was benched in the second quarter of the second game, never to be seen again after being ruled out with a shoulder injury. (He eventually settled on a transfer to SMU.) Immediately following Gilbert’s exit from the lineup, the Longhorns a) Rallied from a 13-0 hole against BYU behind sophomore Case McCoy and true freshman David Ash, b) Trounced UCLA in the Rose Bowl, 49-20, on a 13-of-15, two-touchdown effort by McCoy, and c) Won comfortably at Iowa State to extend their record to 4-0 heading into the annual date with top-ranked Oklahoma on Oct. 8.

Five turnovers and three defensive touchdowns later, any illusions about the “chemistry” of the Ash/McCoy ticket had been permanently shattered. The back half of the season was a chaotic pas de deux that resolved nothing and repeatedly answered the question “Have the Longhorns found the quarterback of the future?” with a firm “Not really.” In five losses, Texas had more than twice as many turnovers (17) as offensive touchdowns (7) and barely averaged 14 points per game; in late wins over Texas A&M and Cal, two of the ‘Horns’ three touchdown passes came via the arm of freshman receiver Jaxon Shipley on trick plays. After the Holiday Bowl, they ranked eighth out of ten Big 12 teams in scoring and ninth in pass efficiency, leaving UT no closer to a permanent answer at the most important position than it was in August.

I complained about the passing game, until I met a man with no healthy tailbacks. The book on first-year offensive coordinator Bryan Harsin suggests a heavy dose of misdirection, throwbacks and other hocus pocus he imported from Boise State, and the tricky stuff was certainly there. When the offense was working, though — that is, in back-to-back midseason blowouts over Kansas and Texas Tech — it was a smashmouth affair: In those two games alone, the ‘Horns kept it on the ground an incredible 126 times for 880 yards and 11 touchdowns, outscoring the Jayhawks and Red Raiders by a combined 75 points. They also went over 200 rushing against UCLA, Oklahoma State and Baylor.

buffett.jpgOf course, all five of those defenses ranked 90th or worse against the run, giving up somewhere in the neighborhood of 200 yards on the ground as a matter of course. (Considering they play in the most pass-happy conference, Texas Tech and Kansas were arguably the two worst run defenses in the nation.) But if anyone has a future on the offense, it’s freshman tailback Malcolm Brown, who was well on his way to fulfilling the five-star hype before he was struck down with the dreaded turf toe on the heels of back-to-back 100-yard games in October. He was joined shortly thereafter on the injury list by ailing backfield mates Fozzy Whittaker and Joe Bergeron, and UT limped through the last five games — losing three — with no offensive identity and virtually no firepower to speak of.

Something old, something new. Reviews were considerably better for first-year defensive coordinator Manny Diaz, who kept the torch lit by Florida-bound predecessor Will Muschamp burning at the top of the Big 12 rankings. Texas led the conference in total defense for the fourth year in a row and slung the moribund offense on its back for the late wins over Texas A&M and Cal, thanks in large part to four seniors — defensive tackle Kheeston Randall, linebackers Emmanuel Acho and Keenan Robinson and safety Blake Gideon — whose steady presence belied the overall youth movement. Make no mistake: With four other players back next year who qualified for a first or second-team All-Big 12 nod — defensive ends Alex Okafor and Jackson Jeffcoat, cornerback Quandre Diggs and safety Kenny Vaccaro — this unit isn’t going anywhere in 2012.

Return of the Mack. The quarterback situation is still in flux, there are no reliable playmakers at the skill positions and almost half the starting defense will be new. The only certainty in 2012: Head coach Mack Brown, who’s about to get another contract extension to fend off rumors of his imminent retirement, locking him in (on paper, anyway) for the foreseeable future. After 13 wildly successful years, Brown was forced to overhaul the entire operation after the 5-7 disaster in 2010 with two new coordinators and an almost entirely new coaching staff. Their first campaign together was a small step forward, and recruiting is still going like gangbusters, as always. If McCoy or Ash (or an as-yet unidentified blue-chip) develops into a reliable starter, the overall talent level is where it was when Colt McCoy was leading the Longhorns to BCS bowls in 2008 and 2009.

As of right now, there is no indication that Ash or McCoy is going to raise his game to that level, and the only candidate for the title of “rising blue-chip” — incoming recruit Connor Brewer, a four-star prospect from Scottsdale, Ariz. — would force the offense to spend another year in the development phase. At age 60, Brown insists he still has the patience to see the rebuilding cycle through. Until they find a way to upgrade under center, Longhorn fans should probably follow his lead.

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Matt Hinton is on Facebook and Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

Dr. Saturday – NCAAF – Yahoo! Sports

Ash leads Texas over Cal in Holiday Bowl (AP)

December 29th, 2011 by

California wide receiver Marvin Jones (1) is upended in the second half against Texas during the Holiday Bowl NCAA college football game Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011, in San Diego. Texas beat California 21-10.

The next time Texas coach Mack Brown sees Joey Harrington, the memory shouldn’t be quite so painful. David Ash added his name to the list of quarterbacks who’ve caught a touchdown pass in the Holiday Bowl and he also threw for one score to lead Texas to a 21-10 victory against California on Wednesday night.



Yahoo! Sports – NCAA Football News

Ash leads Texas over Cal in Holiday Bowl

December 29th, 2011 by

David Ash threw for one touchdown and caught a TD pass to lead Texas to a 21-10 win over California in the Holiday Bowl on Wednesday night.




USATODAY.com Collegefootball

Texas A&M lineman killed in car crash

December 24th, 2011 by

Texas A&M senior offensive lineman Joseph Villavisencio has been killed in a car accident, according to the university.




USATODAY.com Collegefootball

Texas tops most valuable college football teams

December 23rd, 2011 by

After the Longhorns, the Southeastern Conference and Big Ten occupy 16 of the top 20 spots in the annual list generated by the magazine.




USATODAY.com Collegefootball

Texas A&M’s Villavisencio dies in crash (AP)

December 23rd, 2011 by

Texas A&M senior offensive lineman Joseph Villavisencio has been killed in a car accident, according to the university. Witness reports say that Villavisencio swerved to avoid a buzzard and veered head-on into the path of an 18-wheeler near the town of Normangee about 40 miles from College Station, on Thursday.
Yahoo! Sports – NCAA Football News

Video: Following the Heisman to its new home in Waco, Texas

December 19th, 2011 by

Robert Griffin III has had a heck of a week. He won the Davey O’Brien award (nation’s best quarterback) last Thursday, the Heisman Trophy on Saturday and has since and been named to a host of All-America teams and has appeared on a multitude of television shows.

He has to be exhausted — and he still has to get his Heisman back to Waco.

Ever wonder how they do that? Does the Heisman Trophy Trust ship it? Does the winner carry it on the plane? Just throw it in a suitcase and hope for the best from the airline?

Video: Following the Heisman to its new home in Waco, TexasLuckily for us, Baylor filmed the bronze statue’s entire trip from New York back to Waco complete with cameos by Griffin’s father, Griffin’s teammates and Baylor basketball coach Scott Drew, who just had to get his photo with the infamous trophy.

Baylor is really having fun with this moment and who can blame the university? It hasn’t known a lot of success in its history and short of a national championship, this is the best thing that could happen to the Bears’ football program.

Unfortunately, Griffin’s time in Waco may be coming to an end. According to Yahoo! Sports’ Jason Cole, Griffin’s parents are currently interviewing agents should their son decide to declare for the NFL draft.

Numerous scouts and executives believe the 6-foot-2, 220-pound Griffin will be a high first-round draft pick. It’s anticipated that if Heisman runner-up Andrew Luck of Stanford goes No. 1 overall, Griffin will likely be selected by the Washington Redskins or Miami Dolphins. On Monday night, ESPN analyst and former NFL coach Jon Gruden said he would love to coach Griffin in the pros.

“You hear it a lot of places, but he’s a miniature Cam Newton,” one scout said. “He’s a quarterback with the ability to run for 40 yards even when he’s not looking to run. … His intangibles are off the charts, really smart, great family, the whole thing.”

But Griffin, a junior, is busy preparing for the Alamo Bowl against Washington and has said he hasn’t made a decision about his football future. But it’s hard to see how he’ll ever be hotter than he is now.

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Graham Watson is on Facebook and Twitter: Follow her @Yahoo_Graham

Dr. Saturday – NCAAF – Yahoo! Sports

Texas A&M enlists Kevin Sumlin to lead its SEC invasion by air

December 10th, 2011 by

Texas A&M enlists Kevin Sumlin to lead its SEC invasion by air

As poorly as Mike Sherman’s exit went over last week, at least the Aggies have something to show for it: As expected, A&M has landed the hottest name in the offseason coaching market, Houston’s Kevin Sumlin, thereby guaranteeing next year’s transition from the Big 12 to the SEC will come with a heavy dose of heavy passing.

Sumlin leaves Houston with the best winning percentage of any coach in school history (.672) and a single-season record for wins (12) under his belt. He returns to College Station as the first black head coach in A&M history and the new steward of the same expectations that got Sherman fired just one year after an apparent breakthrough in 2010, as the Aggies brace themselves for landing in the toughest division in college football.

Texas A&M enlists Kevin Sumlin to lead its SEC invasion by airIf Sumlin knows anything, it’s throwing the ball all over the field, all day long. He was wide receivers coach at his alma mater, Purdue, when Drew Brees ruled the skies there from 1998-2000. He was an offensive assistant at Oklahoma for Jason White’s Heisman run in 2003, the Sooners’ return to the BCS title game in 2004 and the beginning of Sam Bradford’s emergence as a sharpshooting robot in 2007.

For the last four years, he’s overseen the most prolific passing career in the history of college football courtesy of Case Keenum, who leaves Houston with Division I records for total yards, passing yards, completions and touchdowns. With Keenum at the controls, the Cougars led the nation in total and scoring offense this season for the second time in three years, after finishing second in total offense in Sumlin’s first season, 2008. With Keenum out for nearly all of 2010, the Cougars still averaged 38 points on 480 yards per game.

After this season, though, Sumlin’s tenure at Houston is also notable for what it lacked: A Conference USA championship. As West Division champs in 2009, Keenum was picked off three times in the C-USA Championship Game en route to a 38-32 loss at East Carolina. Last week, with an automatic BCS bid and millions at stake for all of the “Have Not” conferences, Keenum was humbled again in his worst game of the season, a 49-28 loss to Southern Miss that derailed the first perfect season in school history. Faced with anything resembling a real defense — which didn’t happen often — the Cougars’ version of the “Air Raid” noticeably struggled.

Which brings us to the bigger questions about its transition to Texas A&M: a) How will Sumlin’s offense fare without the most prolific quarterback in college football pulling the trigger? And b) How will it fare against the defenses in the Aggies’ new conference, the SEC, which has resisted the rise of up-tempo, spread passing attacks for more than a decade? Sumlin was never an offensive coordinator before he landed the top job at Houston (he had the title of “co-offensive coordinator” at Texas A&M and Oklahoma, but didn’t call plays and wasn’t primarily in charge of the offense at either stop), and no one has successfully imported a pass-first system in the SEC since Air Raid guru Hal Mumme was run out of Kentucky ten years ago. The only other coach who’s tried, Tommy Tuberville, was fired after his team rejected a spread transplant by offensive coordinator Tony Franklin in 2008. This year, the only SEC offenses that passed more often than they ran in conference games were Arkansas and Tennessee, and it was a roughly 50/50 proposition in both cases.

Houston passed more than it ran in every single game of Sumlin’s tenure with Keenum in the lineup, and in almost all of the games that he missed. In 2009, the Cougars put the ball in the air more frequently than any team in the country; this year, they were third behind their Air Raid brethren at Texas Tech and Arizona. Sumlin will almost certainly be accompanied by his offensive coordinator, Kliff Kingsbury, who was the first of a succession of prolific spread passers under Mike Leach at Texas Tech.

Texas A&M has already embraced the fast-break philosophy that Leach’s success spawned throughout the Big 12. Sumlin’s arrival just makes it official: When the Aggies touch down in the SEC next fall, they’re coming out of the chute firing.

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Matt Hinton is on Facebook and Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

Dr. Saturday – NCAAF – Yahoo! Sports

Houston’s Sumlin to coach Texas A&M (AP)

December 10th, 2011 by

A person with knowledge of the decision says Houston’s Kevin Sumlin has accepted an offer to become the coach at Texas A&M. The person spoke on condition of anonymity to The Associated Press because no official announcement has been made. Sumlin arrived at the Houston student athletics center about noon Saturday.
Yahoo! Sports – NCAA Football News

Texas A&M pulls the plug on Mike Sherman, valedictorian of the NFL’s mediocrity exchange

December 2nd, 2011 by

Texas A&M pulls the plug on Mike Sherman, valedictorian of the NFL’s mediocrity exchange

Texas A&M’s fourth season under Mike Sherman began with the Aggies basking in a pending defection to the SEC and its highest expectations in a decade. It ended tonight with Sherman being led to the guillotine on the heels of a 6-6 campaign defined by blown second-half leads and a steady drumbeat of disappointment, drawing the curtain on a tenure that encompassed 25 wins and 25 losses.

In its own way, it was a remarkable, carefully honed achievement: A near-perfect ode to mediocrity.

Texas A&M pulls the plug on Mike Sherman, valedictorian of the NFL’s mediocrity exchangeUnder different circumstances, there might have been some solace in the fact that A&M was so close. Five of the Aggies’ six losses in 2011 came by a combined 17 points, two of them in overtime, three of them against teams ranked in the top dozen of the latest BCS standings. Five of the six came after they led by at least two scores in the second half. They played arguably the toughest schedule in the country, and were in every game except one (a 41-25 loss at Oklahoma on Nov. 5) down to the final snap. Even after last week’s last-second loss to Texas, the computer polls remained suitably impressed with the overall product.

But Texas A&M wasn’t an up-and-comer building toward a run in 2012: On the heels of a 6-1 finish in 2010, it was a consensus top-10 contender this summer with no glaring weaknesses. The 2011 Aggies had the savvy senior quarterback (Ryan Tannehill), the best 1-2 tailback punch in the Big 12 (Cyrus Gray and Christine Michael), a completely intact receiving corps, a nearly intact offensive line featuring at least two future draft picks and eight returning starters from a vastly improved defense under first-year coordinator Tim DeRuyter. It was the single best opportunity A&M has had for a move on the Big 12 On the other side of the regular season, they limped in with losses in four of their last five, marquee wins over Iowa State and Baylor and something less than a winning record for the third time in four years.

Sherman returned to College Station from a decade in the NFL, including six years as head coach of the Green Bay Packers, and may well go down as the patron saint of dour, milquetoast refugees from the league. The trajectory of his tenure at A&M is a model for the genre: Four years, zero conference championships, ending with a minor breakthrough (9-4 in 2010) that’s immediately followed by a disappointing return to mediocrity. Four other ex-NFL head coaches have been hired for their first college head coaching job since 2002:

Chan Gailey (Georgia Tech): Six years, zero conference championships, ending in a minor breakthrough (9-5 in 2006) that was immediately followed by a disappointing return to mediocrity (7-5 in 2007).
Bill Callahan (Nebraska): Four years, zero conference championships, ending in a minor breakthrough in (9-5 in 2006) that was immediately followed by a return to mediocrity (5-7 in 2007).
Dave Wannstedt (Pittsburgh): Six years, zero conference championships, ending in a minor breakthrough (10-3 in 2009) that was immediately followed by a return to mediocrity (7-5 in 2010).
Lane Kiffin (Tennessee). One mediocre season (7-6 in 2009), which he parlayed into his dream job at USC. What can you say? The man is a trailblazer.

See also: Mike Shula, Al Groh, Greg Robinson and Charlie Weis, all longtime NFL assistants turned infamously failed college head coaches. Their teams are indistinguishable, and their fate is always the same.

If campus titans like Nick Saban, Butch Davis, Steve Spurrier and Bobby Petrino couldn’t hack it in their brief stints in the pros, the grim offerings coming in the opposite direction have failed to produce anything better than the equivalent of an early exit in the playoffs. Which, come to think of it, is exactly how they all fared in the NFL, too. The principles of Chan Gailey Equilibrium are eternal: Wherever you go in life, basic competence and a reflexive deference to conventional wisdom under any and all circumstances will produce victory exactly 58.3 percent of the time.

Now: Who’s going to roll the dice on Jack Del Rio before it’s too late?

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Matt Hinton is on Facebook and Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

Dr. Saturday – NCAAF – Yahoo! Sports



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